Nomenclature and Definition of Atrophic Lesions in Small Bowel Capsule Endoscopy: A Delphi Consensus Statement of the International CApsule endoscopy REsearch (I-CARE) Group

Author:

Elli LucaORCID,Marinoni Beatrice,Sidhu Reena,Bojarski Christian,Branchi FedericaORCID,Tontini Gian Eugenio,Chetcuti Zammit Stefania,Khater Sherine,Eliakim Rami,Rondonotti Emanuele,Saurin Jean Cristhophe,Bruno Mauro,Buchkremer Juliane,Cadoni SergioORCID,Cavallaro Flaminia,Dray Xavier,Ellul PierreORCID,Urien Ignacio Fernandez,Keuchel Martin,Kopylov Uri,Koulaouzidis AnastasiosORCID,Leenhardt Romain,Baltes Peter,Beaumont HannekeORCID,Marmo Clelia,McNamara Deirdre,Mussetto AlessandroORCID,Nemeth Artur,Cuadrado Robles Enrique PerezORCID,Perrod Guillame,Rahmi Gabriel,Riccioni Maria Elena,Robertson AlexanderORCID,Spada CristianoORCID,Toth ErvinORCID,Triantafyllou KonstantinosORCID,Wurm Johansson Gabriele,Rimondi AlessandroORCID

Abstract

(1) Background: Villous atrophy is an indication for small bowel capsule endoscopy (SBCE). However, SBCE findings are not described uniformly and atrophic features are sometimes not recognized; (2) Methods: The Delphi technique was employed to reach agreement among a panel of SBCE experts. The nomenclature and definitions of SBCE lesions suggesting the presence of atrophy were decided in a core group of 10 experts. Four images of each lesion were chosen from a large SBCE database and agreement on the correspondence between the picture and the definition was evaluated using the Delphi method in a broadened group of 36 experts. All images corresponded to histologically proven mucosal atrophy; (3) Results: Four types of atrophic lesions were identified: mosaicism, scalloping, folds reduction, and granular mucosa. The core group succeeded in reaching agreement on the nomenclature and the descriptions of these items. Consensus in matching the agreed definitions for the proposed set of images was met for mosaicism (88.9% in the first round), scalloping (97.2% in the first round), and folds reduction (94.4% in the first round), but granular mucosa failed to achieve consensus (75.0% in the third round); (4) Conclusions: Consensus among SBCE experts on atrophic lesions was met for the first time. Mosaicism, scalloping, and folds reduction are the most reliable signs, while the description of granular mucosa remains uncertain.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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